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pmahajan28(Newbie)Newbie
3 May 2026

Hi everyone,

One of the 7-Eleven stores has received a payment for a VID180 loss claim and a rebate claim, in accordance with a court order in the case of Davaria Pty Ltd vs 7-Eleven Stores.

I would like to understand the tax treatment of this receipt. Specifically, is this amount assessable as income, or should it be treated under capital gains tax provisions?

I have reviewed the ATO website but could not find any guidance specific to this type of payment.

Any insights or references would be greatly appreciated.

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24 views
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Most helpful reply

JayATO(Community Support)Community Support
5 May 2026

Hi @pmahajan28,


The tax treatment of court settlement payments depends on what the payment compensates for. You need to consider whether the payment replaces ordinary income, compensates for lost profits, or relates to a capital asset.


Generally, compensation payments received in connection with carrying on a business are assessable income. This applies whether the payment is revenue or capital in nature. If the settlement compensates you for lost income or profits from your business operations, it's typically included in your assessable income.


However, if the settlement relates to the disposal or acquisition of a capital asset, capital gains tax provisions may apply instead. The specific facts of the Davaria Pty Ltd vs 7-Eleven Stores case and what the court order specifies the payments are compensating for will determine the correct treatment.


Insurance claim payments related to your business are assessable income. If the VID180 loss claim functions similarly to an insurance payment for business losses, this would support treating it as assessable income.


Given the complexity of court settlements and the lack of specific guidance for this case, you should consider the nature of each payment component separately. Review the court order to identify what each amount compensates for, then apply the appropriate tax treatment. If you remain uncertain after reviewing the court documentation, you may wish to seek a private ruling for your specific circumstances.

All replies

Most helpful reply

JayATO(Community Support)Community Support
5 May 2026

Hi @pmahajan28,


The tax treatment of court settlement payments depends on what the payment compensates for. You need to consider whether the payment replaces ordinary income, compensates for lost profits, or relates to a capital asset.


Generally, compensation payments received in connection with carrying on a business are assessable income. This applies whether the payment is revenue or capital in nature. If the settlement compensates you for lost income or profits from your business operations, it's typically included in your assessable income.


However, if the settlement relates to the disposal or acquisition of a capital asset, capital gains tax provisions may apply instead. The specific facts of the Davaria Pty Ltd vs 7-Eleven Stores case and what the court order specifies the payments are compensating for will determine the correct treatment.


Insurance claim payments related to your business are assessable income. If the VID180 loss claim functions similarly to an insurance payment for business losses, this would support treating it as assessable income.


Given the complexity of court settlements and the lack of specific guidance for this case, you should consider the nature of each payment component separately. Review the court order to identify what each amount compensates for, then apply the appropriate tax treatment. If you remain uncertain after reviewing the court documentation, you may wish to seek a private ruling for your specific circumstances.

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Are the loss claims and rebate claims received by 7 eleven stores taxable? | ATO Community